You can find it on Page 165 of the new Knicks media guide – the list of 22 head coaches the franchise had entering the 2006-07 season.

The 22 coaches are in order of Knicks’ career winning percentage.

Larry Brown is last on the list – 23-59, a .280 winning clip. Statistically and spiritually, Brown was the worst coach in Knicks history.

Isiah Thomas is the 23rd to take the top spot on the bench. He was forced into the role by owner James Dolan, with 82 games to prove Brown – an esteemed Hall of Fame coach with a prior career NBA winning percentage of .531 and 17 playoff berths in 22 NBA seasons – was the sole cause, not an underachieving $122 million roster.

Armed with virtually the same cast, the Knick soap opera is as compelling a storyline as there is in the NBA regular season, which opens for the Knicks in Memphis Wednesday.

Thomas hates Brown so much now, he wouldn’t even refer to him by name during the preseason.

Thomas expects to make the playoffs, but he’s firing warning shots about a potential ragged November, with five of their first seven on the road and perhaps being without their only significant new addition, Jared Jeffries, for the month.

“If we get knocked down early, we’re not going to fold up our tent and say the season’s over,” Thomas said. “Hell no. We’re going to fight to get back in the race. It’s not a one-month season. You want to be playing your best basketball in April.” In truth, the Knicks may show the league’s largest improvement in victories and still miss the playoffs.

POINT GUARD

Thomas doesn’t use the PG term. He calls them “pushmen,” guys he wants pushing the ball upcourt in his new high-octane offense. He’s got four guards capable – Stephon Marbury, Steve Francis, Nate Robinson and Jamal Crawford. Defense is the concern here. Marbury no longer is quick enough to keep speedy PGs out of the lane, so it’s up to Francis – by his admission, never known as a stopper. Thomas wants Marbury to attack the basket without worries, his best attribute. Look for Marbury’s assists to go down but his scoring to return to normal.

SHOOTING GUARD

The Marbury-Francis starting backcourt might not be the finishing backcourt. Crawford will be on the court at the end of close games. He’s their best and, by far, most clutch shooter with the poise for hitting last-second game-winners. The player Brown abhorred, the spunky 5-9 Robinson will be given free reign by Thomas to tear down the Garden rim.

SMALL FORWARD

Brown bellyached most about this slot last season and started seven different guys. Thomas finds himself in the same boat, with Jeffries, a perimeter defensive demon, out for November with a wrist injury. Thomas hasn’t decided on a starter, but Quentin Richardson was the biggest preseason revelation, looking spry, confident and fluid with his outside shot after an awful 2005-06 season. But Richardson can’t defend like Jeffries. Rookie Renaldo Balkman was an alloverthe-court pleasing presence in October, making banished Jalen Rose look 100 years old.

POWER FORWARD

David Lee looked a lot sharper than Channing Frye, who will start. Two of the three gems from last season’s rookie class will man this spot. Frye never got any offensive rhythm going. Despite being bulked up, Frye had no post game and Thomas didn’t run and pickandrolls to showcase his silky jumper.